Amazon Jungle Trip
Lake Mamori
25.06.2008 - 30.06.2008
30 °C
View
South America
on Steve-Kay's travel map.
When we got to Manaus, we'd planned to get the bus straight out to Venezuela, but we bumped into an Amazon Jungle guide who ended up talking us into going on one of his trips instead!
The next morning they picked us up early and a bus, boat, another bus and another boat later we were at their jungle lodge which was really nice....

We all slept in a big hut in hammocks with mozzie nets....

On the first day we went piranha fishing. We caught loads but felt quite bad about it, although we did eat them so they didn't die in vain.....plus they would've eaten us if they'd got the chance! We thought they were quite small but everytime I got one the guide kept saying 'grande grande'! They were evil looking red things with very sharp teeth (obviously)! I would have got a photo of it but I accidentally drowned my poor camera and it stopped working!
That night, when it was pitch black, we went Caiman spotting and the guide scared the life out of us by saying 'some things might jump into the boat but don't jump or panic and fall in because the things in the water are much more dangerous than the things in the boat' - great! He spotted a small caiman just by the eyes glowing in the torch light and caught it before we even knew it was there - it looked just like a crocodile (not sure what the difference is?).
The next day we did a jungle trek and, I know this is obvious, there are A LOT of bugs in the Amazon Jungle! We had things biting us and flying into us all the time but we braved it out and it was excellent. The guide showed us lots of medicinal trees, including the 'Vicks' tree (now you know where that vapour rub comes from!).
This is Steve drinking from a tree root (photo's a bit on the blurry side)....

This is a bird-eating tarantula which I thought was wicked but scared the life out of Steve!....

At about 10pm that night we were chilling in the bar with a caipirinha when our guide came along and asked us if we wanted to go to a birthday party in a hut nearby....we did of course, so we drowned ourselves in insect repellent and off we went with our guide and some friends from our group. We pulled up in our canoe and clambered across the other boats 'parked' there to the hut....

The decking outside was full to the brim with people drinking and dancing. We got ourselves a drink and all stood around a bit sheepishly at first, but the locals were very welcoming and they even dragged a few people inside to dance - not us though because their rule is that people who are married can only dance with eachother or relatives (well, we like to think that was the reason!).

It didn't take long for us all to relax and soon we were in this little room strutting our stuff....

We left there about 2.30am and our (drunk) boat driver just about managed to get us back to the lodge in the pitch black, narrowly avoiding driving us into the depths of the jungle along the way! The party went on for ages after we'd left and we could still hear the music when we got up for breakfast the next morning!
On the last day we went canoeing through the flooded forest (the water rises about 12 metres in some places around Lake Mamori during the wet season). It was very hard work to get through all the branches either overhead or under the water, plus loads of insects kept falling on us....yuk! We did see a family of Howler monkeys making their way through the trees though so it was worth it.
We also saw a massive wasps' nest hanging from a tree....

After we got back from the trip we spent our final night in Brazil with the friends we'd met in the jungle, which was fantastic. Then we caught a bus to Venezuela the following day....
Posted by Steve-Kay 06.08.2008 15:42 Archived in Backpacking | Brazil Comments (0)




























